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Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers took over
50,000 years to multiply from a few thousand individuals living in sub-Saharan
Modern man came on the scene in
Around 20 per cent of bird species have become
extinct in the past 200 years alone and another 11% is on the verge of
extinction. We are also losing between
2,000 and 20,000 rainforest species a year.
What is common to these few observations of human
history is that they are all examples of man’s boundless ability to change the
world around him – be it eradicating the hominids who occupied the Earth before
him or in relentlessly putting pressure on the natural environment around
him. And what is even more apparent from
a mere cursory reading of our history is the remarkable acceleration in the way
in which we are changing the world around us.
For instance, it took us more than 37,000 years to increase our
population 50 times by 1750 A.D. But
then, it took us only another 250 years (or 0.7% of the earlier time interval)
to increase our number twelve-fold from 500 million to more than 6 billion today.
This propensity of ours to change the world around
us has been either the result of an intentional or deliberate action on our
part or an indirect consequence of the lifestyle choices we make during our
sojourn on Earth. It can probably be
argued that not all the loss of biodiversity and other destruction over the
years can be attributed to our direct meddling in the ecosystem that surrounds
and nurtures us. But, the current
alarming increase in the rate of loss of biodiversity attests to the fact that
our lifestyles have – particularly after the advent of the Industrial
Revolution in the 19th century – wreaked incalculable damage on the
world we live in. Deforestation, for
example, releases the carbon already stored in trees and decreases the amount
being taken out of the atmosphere. Nitrous
oxide released by automobiles traps the sun’s heat and re-emit it towards the
Earth. These activities may be leading
to rising temperatures worldwide. For
instance, in 1998 ocean temperatures off
Likewise, scientists do not suggest that the
Neanderthals were purged by Upper Palaeolithic Moderns in some kind of hominid
genocide. Rather, it may have been
natural selection that acted as the Neanderthal Nemesis. As Spencer Wells has postulated, the
Neanderthal’s conquerors had a complex social structure and with their
“improved toolkits and bands of intelligent, social hunters, modern humans were
much more efficient at hunting than the Neanderthals.” While the demise of these hominids may have
been an unintended consequence of the arrival of homo
sapiens in
Moreover, life based on agriculture led to the
“stratification of society”, as Wells observes.
Once this occurred, “the seizure of power and the growth of empires was
not far behind, which led to war on a scale that had never been seen in the
Palaeolithic.” And wars, in addition to
their usual ills, had other knock-on consequences – such as exacerbating the
spread of diseases and destruction of precious cropland.
Wars today may be (fortunately) less frequent as now
generally larger principalities are involved.
But (unfortunately) when wars do take place, they are much more
destructive. To cite an example from recent history, 8 million people died
during World War I over four years. But
just two decades later, 55 million were killed over a course of six years
during World War II. The two bombs over
Further, while wars may be relatively less frequent
in modern times, a new kind of war is now being waged by a new age of rulers
whose effect on the world around us, including ourselves, could be equally
insidious and damaging and result in irreversible consequences. Some of these new rulers exhibit the same
aggression, greed and capacity for destruction, which was typical of history’s
previous posse of aggressors. We call
this new band “corporations”.
In the past, we had a lot of benevolent dictators
interspersed by a few despicable despots here and there. Today we have instead a lot of benevolent
companies, who, when not completely benevolent, may not at least intentionally
harm the milieu in which they operate.
But there are also a number of entities that are driven solely by greed,
short-term goals and are not chagrined by their destruction of the world around
them. These organisations have been able
to turn lawless because modern society measures prosperity in terms of material
wealth, instead of real happiness, at the individual level and uses imperfect
benchmarks such as the GDP (which does not differentiate between spending that
will increase real happiness and wasteful consumption) to measure success at
the level of the wider economic and socio-political levels. Corporations thrive by supplying these goods
and services with scant regard to the associated “soft” costs - costs to
society, the environment and the risks to our long-term existence on this
planet. We have commoditised virtually
every facet of life on Earth and let the market dictate the way we live. As Bill Bryson puts it wryly, “we used to
build civilisations. Now we build
shopping malls.” Moreover, even to
question the efficacy of the market economy and the rise of corporations with
is deemed sacrilegious. As John Ralston
Saul observes, “… we feel that everything that is socially successful is
dependent on the success of the marketplace.
We feel that to in any way analyse the marketplace, change the shape or direction
of it, is in some way to endanger democracy, by endangering prosperity.”
Why are we in such a hurry? Why are we so bent on acquiring all these
goods and services, which we may not always need, and in the process also
destroying the world around us? It is as
if that almost from the moment our forefathers came on the planet, we have been
driven by a senseless apocalyptic urge to irreversibly change the planet and
ultimately destroy it. If you were a
believer in Hindu theology and cosmogony, you would think that the end of Kali
Yuga is upon us.
Hindu scriptures divide time into four yugas or
periods, which together extend to 12,000 “divine years”. During these four yugas – namely, Krita,
Treta, Dvapara and Kali – goodness and prosperity on Earth dwindle
gradually. The Krita, for example, is
that age in which righteousness is eternal.
During the Treta Yuga, righteousness decreases by a fourth and during
the Dvapara Yuga ignorance increases and during Kali Yuga ignorance
prevails. The Krita is thus the golden
age and Kali (“an age of strife and dissension”) the iron one.
At the end of Kali Yuga, which makes up ten per cent
of those 12,000 divine years, Vishnu (the Hindu god of preservation) will
reappear on Earth “bearing the name Kalki, to put an end to… [ignorance and]…
wickedness, and establish a kingdom of righteousness…” Fortunately, Hindus
believe also that the end of Kali Yuga is not the ultimate end of the world as
we perceive it. It is certainly not the
Hindu variant of the Biblical Armageddon, the final battle that will end the
world. It will instead be more
redemptive. As R K Narayan points out, “since goodness
triumphs in the end, there is no tragedy in the Greek sense; the curtain never
comes down finally on corpses strewn about the stage…..
Everything is bound to come out right in the end; if not immediately, at least
in a thousand or ten thousand years; if not in this world, at least in other
worlds.”
But many of us may not have the patience to wait for
a thousand years or so for the world to right itself. (Yes, we are in a hurry in this too.) Moreover, if we were serious about bringing
about the changes that will provide real lasting happiness, reduce damage to
the ecosystem and our fellow beings (both human and animal),
we should be endeavouring to begin today, this moment. In the words of Bill McKinnen, author of the
book “The End of Nature”), ‘the story of the twentieth century was finding our
just how big and powerful we were… The story of the twenty-first century is going
to be finding out if we can figure our ways to get smaller or not. To see if we can summon the will, and then
the way, to make ourselves somewhat smaller, and try to fit back into this
planet.”
One possible first step in this new journey would be
to re-evaluate the way we treat the environment. We humans are not the only inhabitants on
this planet: it supports several million other species of flora and fauna
too. Our long-term survival on Earth and
the sustainability of the biosphere which caters for our needs (and wants) is
possible only through an awareness of the need to maintain development and
growth without irreversibly harming nature.
After all, as E F Schumacher pointed out, “no degree of prosperity could
justify [our poisoning the Earth]…. The idea that a civilisation could sustain
itself on the basis of such a transgression is an ethical, spiritual and
metaphysical monstrosity.”